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Odoo 11 Development Essentials

You're reading from   Odoo 11 Development Essentials Develop and customize business applications with Odoo 11

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788477796
Length 336 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Daniel Reis Daniel Reis
Author Profile Icon Daniel Reis
Daniel Reis
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Quick Start – The Odoo Developer Mode and Concepts FREE CHAPTER 2. Installing and Organizing the Development Environment 3. Your First Odoo Application – A Practical Overview 4. Models – Structuring the Application Data 5. Import, Export, and Module Data 6. The ORM API – Handling Application Data 7. Business Logic – Supporting Business Processes 8. External API – Integrating with Other Systems 9. Backend Views – Design the User Interface 10. Kanban Views and Client-Side QWeb 11. Reports and Server-Side QWeb 12. Creating Website Frontend Features 13. Debugging and Automated Tests 14. Deploying and Maintaining Production Instances 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Report totals


A common need in reports is to provide totals. This can be done using Python expressions to compute those totals.

After the closing tag of <t t-foreach>, we will add a final row with the totals:

<!-- Report footer content -->
<div class="row">
  <div class="col-xs-3">
    Count: <t t-esc="len(docs)" /> 
  </div> 
  <div class="col-xs-2" /> 
  <div class="col-xs-1" /> 
  <div class="col-xs-3" /> 
  <div class="col-xs-3" /> 
</div> 

The len() Python statement is used to count the number of elements in a collection. Similarly, totals can also be computed using sum() over a list of values. For example, if we had an amount_cost field, we could have used the following list comprehension to compute the corresponding total:

<t t-esc="sum([o.amount_cost for o in docs])" />

You can think of list comprehensions as embedded for loops.

Sometimes, we want to perform some computations as we go along with the report, for example...

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